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Wyoming Announces Rosters for 2026 Wyoming-Montana All-Star Basketball Series

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Wyoming Announces Rosters for 2026 Wyoming-Montana All-Star Basketball Series


The annual Wyoming-Montana All-Star basketball series celebrates its 50th anniversary this summer. The State of Wyoming released its rosters for the 2026 event, which is on Friday, June 12, at the Pronghorn Center in Gillette. The series will move to Lockwood High School in Billings, MT, on Saturday, June 13. The girls’ games will start at 5 p.m., followed by the boys’ games at 7 p.m. both nights.

WYOMING ALL-STAR BASKETBALL PLAYERS 2026

This year is the 50th for the boys’ series and the 29th for the annual girls’ series. They did not play in 2020. The Wyoming girls broke a 16-game losing streak against Montana in 2025 after an 81-75 victory in Billings. Montana holds a 42-14 advantage in the series. In the boys’ series, Montana swept the Wyoming boys last summer, 102-90 and 98-73. They lead the all-time series, 69-29.

The Wyoming girls’ squad is highlighted by all-state award winners and five college commitments. The boys’ roster features players who earned multiple all-state honors, and four players have already committed to playing basketball at the collegiate level.

As the 50th anniversary approaches, organizers are preparing a series of commemorative events to celebrate the legacy of this historic rivalry and showcase the incredible talent of Wyoming’s young basketball stars.

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Read More Boys Basketball News from WyoPreps

Wyoming-Montana All-Star Basketball Series Girls Recap 2025

Wyoming-Montana All-Star Basketball Series Boys Recap 2025

Wyoming-Montana All-Star Basketball Preview 2025

Wyoming Rosters for Wyoming-Montana All-Star BB Series 2025

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WYOMING-MONTANA GIRLS BASKETBALL ALL-STAR GAMES 2024

WYOMING GIRLS ALL-STAR BASKETBALL GAME INTERVIEWS 2024

WYOMING-MONTANA BOYS BASKETBALL ALL-STAR GAMES 2024

WYOMING BOYS ALL-STAR BASKETBALL GAME INTERVIEWS 2024

WYOMING-MONTANA ALL-STAR BASKETBALL PREVIEW 2024

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3A-4A Wyoming HS Girls Basketball All-State 2026

3A-4A Wyoming HS Boys Basketball All-State 2026

1A-2A Wyoming HS Boys Basketball All-State 2026

3A-4A Wyoming HS Boys Basketball All-Conference 2026

1A-2A Wyoming HS Boys Basketball All-Conference 2026

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3A-4A Wyoming HS Girls Basketball All-Conference Players in 2026

1A-2A Wyoming HS Girls Basketball All-Conference Players in 2026

WyoPreps 3A-4A Girls State Basketball Scoreboard 2026

WyoPreps 1A-2A Girls State Basketball Scoreboard 2026

WyoPreps 3A-4A State Basketball Scoreboard 2026

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WyoPreps 1A-2A State Basketball Scoreboard 2026

The 2026 rosters feature 10 girls and 10 boys

Wyoming Girls Roster:

Elizabeth Needham – Cheyenne Central (signed with LCCC for basketball)

Cashlynn Haws – Cheyenne East (will serve a mission in the Philippines)

Sydney Simone – Cody (signed with Carroll College for volleyball)

Erica Wilson – Pinedale (signed with Northwest College for basketball)

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Camryn Wagner – Sheridan (attending Univ. of Utah)

Jaylin Mills – Sundance (signed with Northwest College – basketball & volleyball)

Ashtyn Ketchum – Thunder Basin (attending UW)

Reece McGrath – Thunder Basin (attending UW)

Addy Rouse – Thunder Basin (attending Nova Southeastern Univ.)

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Chaney Reish – Tongue River (signed with Northwest College – basketball & volleyball)

Wyoming Boys Roster:

Jack Andela – Campbell County (signed at Carroll College for basketball)

Collin Roberts – Douglas (signed with Northwest College for basketball)

Carter Alvar – Kelly Walsh

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Mason Eager – Kelly Walsh

Owen Walker – Lovell (serving a mission)

Gavin Patik – Natrona County

Nate Miner – Sheridan (signed with Rocky Mountain College)

Cooper Lancaster – Star Valley

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Cody Bomengen – Thermopolis (signed at Gillette College)

Trypp Burtsfield – Thunder Basin

Six of the eight state championship teams during the 2026 high school season are represented on the girls’ and boys’ teams. On the girls’ roster, 4A champ Cheyenne East, 3A champ Cody, and 2A champ Sundance have players involved. For the boys, it’s 4A champ Sheridan, 3A winner Lovell, and 2A champ Thermopolis.

Nine of the 10 Wyoming girls selected earned all-state awards during the 2026 high school season, and four of them will be playing collegiate basketball this fall. One will be playing volleyball. Eight of the ten Wyoming boys chosen also received all-state honors earlier this year. One more was named all-conference.

Wyoming’s head coaches in 2026 are Liz Lewis (Women’s Team) and Shawn Neary (Men’s Team). They are the current head coaches at Gillette College. Lewis led the Pronghorns to a 24-11 record in the 2025-26 season. They won the Region IX Women’s Basketball Postseason Tournament and reached the NJCAA DI Women’s Basketball Championship Tournament. Neary guided the Gillette men to a 13-15 record in the 2026 season.

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Wyoming-Montana Girls All-Star Basketball

Wyoming-Montana Girls All-Star Basketball

Gallery Credit: Frank Gambino

Wyoming-Montana Boys All-Star Basketball

Wyoming-Montana Boys All-Star Basketball

Gallery Credit: Frank Gambino





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Inside The ‘Cowboy Starship,’ A $7.95 Million Off-Grid Mansion In Remote Wyoming

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Inside The ‘Cowboy Starship,’ A .95 Million Off-Grid Mansion In Remote Wyoming


Twelve miles shy of the Teton County line on a 40-acre slice of Fremont County with five mountain springs and a creek, Dubois resident Gary Engman is building a 9,000-square-foot, off-grid mansion from reclaimed antique wood that he’s calling the Cowboy Starship.

The property, which has just listed with luxury real estate brokerage Engel and Volkers for $7.95 million, is surrounded by the Absaroka and Wind River mountain ranges. Construction is expected to finish sometime in August.

Real estate broker Jo Gathercole said the home has already had a number of international callers expressing interest, and it’s not even finished yet. 

“It’s got solar, it has diesel generators,” she said. “If you wanted internet, you’d put in a Starlink. It’s completely off-grid luxury.”

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Off-grid cabins are not unheard of, especially in Wyoming, Gathercole added. But an off-grid mansion?

“It’s unusual. When I first saw it, it was kind of stunning to think he was doing this. He’s more than a builder. I think of him as an artist,” she said about what Engman’s building. “He’s actually creating art with this home, which makes it very unique in my mind.”

  • The Cowboy Starship is a 9,000-square-foot mansion getting built 12 miles from Teton County’s border in Fremont County. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)
  • Gary Engman in the
    Gary Engman in the “war room” of the Cowboy Starship he’s building. The room will become the master bedroom once the home is completed. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)
  • The horses in this photo are grazing near where a mama grizzly and her cubs played the day before.
    The horses in this photo are grazing near where a mama grizzly and her cubs played the day before. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)

Why Pay $40 Million To Be In Teton County?

Engman has chosen his canvas for the home with care. 

“This is just a spectacular location,” he told Cowboy State Daily, gesturing toward Ramshorn Mountain. “And I think the house looks like a starship that’s landed on top of a Wyoming mountain.”

It’s not the first luxury home Engman, a former seafood magnate, has built, and isn’t likely to be the last. 

Engman is betting he can expand the luxury market to this slice of Fremont County with homes priced more favorably when compared to ultra-wealthy Jackson Hole.

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Based on his research, Engman believes this is the first large-scale, ultra-luxury spec home built in Fremont County. 

The home, Engman said, is comparable to some of the $40 million homes sold in Teton County. 

“One of the houses I’m involved with in Jackson is going on the market for $40 million, and it’s the same size as this,” Engman said. “It’s on 15 acres, and not as nice a lot as this 40 acres. 

“To me, that house is very nice, but not as nice as this one.”

He gestured toward the corner of a fence line about 1,000 feet from the house and said he’d seen a grizzly bear momma with two cubs eating grass there while he was having lunch Wednesday. 

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He’s also seen elk, deer, and antelope browsing through the property’s surrounding pastures.

“I have more wildlife on my ranch than there is in Yellowstone,” he said with a chuckle. “This is going to, I know this will sell quickly. 

“When you look at all the traffic and congestion in Jackson now, and you can buy, for under $10 million, a 40-acre property with a 9,000-square-foot house an hour from the Jackson airport or 20 minutes from the Dubois airport, where you can land any private jet and you save $30 million?”

In his mind, that $30 million covers a private jet and then some, making his property a much more logical deal for those who want to be in or near Jackson Hole. 

  • The view outside of the Cowboy Starship.
    The view outside of the Cowboy Starship. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)
  • Gary Engman points to the area where he saw a mama grizzly bear and cubs playing Wednesday.
    Gary Engman points to the area where he saw a mama grizzly bear and cubs playing Wednesday. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)
  • The bar is going here, where this plywood is holding tools and other items for construction workers.
    The bar is going here, where this plywood is holding tools and other items for construction workers. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)

Of Ghost Mills And Shipwrecks

His company located in Dubois also supplied the reclaimed, antique lumber that Brush Creek Ranch near Saratoga used to built The Farm, Engman said. 

Restoration Lumber Co. produces 2 million to 3 million board feet of reclaimed antique lumber annually and employs 30-40 people.

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For the Cowboy Starship, he’s using redwood planks sourced from Napa Valley’s enormous wine vats for the deck, giving their surface a patina of old purples and reddish brown. 

Overhead, vintage 1910 heavy trusses salvaged from Bumble Bee’s salmon cannery in Washington span the ceilings, tying the mansion to a working waterfront that no longer exists. 

“Everything here has a story, a history,” he said. “It has provenance.”

Not only do they tell a story, they are massively strong. They’ll hold a snow load up to 200 pounds per square foot, Engman said.

The front door, a massive dark brown, is made from old-growth redwood planks transported to the Sea of Cortez more than 150 years ago. They were salvaged from an Indonesian shipwreck.

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The double doors to either side are salvaged Yosemite Pine cut to build booming mine towns in California and date to around 1860.

Gold mines, saw mills, cannery operations — Engman only buys wood from places he is sure can’t be saved or that have no historical value. 

Dismantling is done surgically, cataloguing each beam, which will later be custom cut to size for its new home.

Inside the Cowboy Starship, he’s bringing special reclaimed items for the interior, including an ornate bar from the old Wyoming bar in Lander, built in 1890. He sees that as a particular centerpiece with its ornately carved wood and mirrored face. 

Beyond the bar are picture windows framed with more antique wood, which in turn frame up Ramshorn Mountain like art in a museum. To get to the breathtaking view, Engman wants people to know they’re not just crossing a room. They’re crossing centuries of history.

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  • Wood from old wine vats in California were used to make the deck for the Cowboy Starship.
    Wood from old wine vats in California were used to make the deck for the Cowboy Starship. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)
  • The entrance to the Cowboy Starship.
    The entrance to the Cowboy Starship. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)
  • The reclaimed wood still has 1800s-era square-head nails.
    The reclaimed wood still has 1800s-era square-head nails. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)
  • A decoration over the entrance to the Cowboy Starship.
    A decoration over the entrance to the Cowboy Starship. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)

For The Love Of History

Engman’s obsession with history tracks back to an old saw mill he bought to reclaim its wood after he decided to pivot from a business selling log cabin kits to buyers in Japan.

“It had a lot of spirit to it,” Engman said. “Something about the spirit of that 150-year-old wood somehow got into my psyche. A lot of these saw mills and salmon canneries were all going out of business. So these huge buildings, built in the 1800s, became available. 

“I started buying any of them that I could. I’ve bought enough buildings and antique wood to probably build 1,000 homes of this size.”

Still, he has a code about which buildings he will buy for salvage.

“If a structure can be saved and has any historical value, I will not take it down,” he said. “I very much believe in living history. For instance, if somebody came to me and said, ‘I’ve got this big barn in North Dakota, will you purchase it or I’ll give it to you if y ou take it down?’ I’ve never taken down a barn because I feel that would be destroying our heritage.”

If they still wanted to sell or give it away, he’d work with the owner to put together an organization to raise money to save the barn rather than destroy it. 

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“I’ve done that probably a dozen times,” he said. “There’ll be a big barn or something that really can be saved, I’ll donate all the material to save it.”

It’s important for future generations to see the past in full living color, Engman said.

“To see and understand what the pioneers and the Native American people went through, just to survive in this country,” he said. “You destroy all the beautiful antique structures and replace them with trailer parks, what is an 18-year-old going to learn from that?”

Engman’s obsession with history doesn’t stop at salvaged timbers. He sits on the board for Fremont County’s museum foundation. 

Once the Cowboy Starship is complete, he plans to host a party there as a fundraiser where he expects to raise around $100,000 by donating a weeklong charter on his 110-foot super yacht. He’s also considering a historical display of recent artifacts he found while traveling through Arizona.

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  • From a distance, the Cowboy Starship has been designed to look like a space vessel — after re-entering orbit and burning up the exterior.
    From a distance, the Cowboy Starship has been designed to look like a space vessel — after re-entering orbit and burning up the exterior. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)
  • The Cowboy Starship is surrounded by the Absaroka Mountains and the Wind River Range.
    The Cowboy Starship is surrounded by the Absaroka Mountains and the Wind River Range. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)
  • The route to Cowboy Starship is along a remote dirt road, but has awesome views, like this one of Ramshorn Mountain.
    The route to Cowboy Starship is along a remote dirt road, but has awesome views, like this one of Ramshorn Mountain. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)
  • These two horses roam free at the Cowboy Starship.
    These two horses roam free at the Cowboy Starship. (Renee Jean, Cowboy State Daily)

From Starship To Stewardship

It’s also important to Engman to build new structures that can become one-of-a-kind legacies, like the Cowboy Starship near Dubois.

That one is actually the second of the “starships.” The first was a 20,000-square-foot mansion Sun Valley at a ski resort in Idaho.

Sun Valley, Engman said, is “probably the most popular ski resort in the United States,” and offers a different kind of setting. There’s world-class skiing, a celebrity cachet, and a market that’s used to ultra-luxury builds. 

The success of that project helped set the template for what he’s now doing in Fremont County, but this time he’s betting on something a little different than a crowded ski town.

“That was my last house,” Engman said. “It took me a year and half to finish that one. And then I bought the ranch here (near Dubois) with the idea of building a spec house. 

“I don’t need to sell it. Maybe I won’t sell it,” he added, staring down at the corner where the grizzly momma played with her cubs the day before. 

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Then he flashed a smile and said, “But I probably will, and then I’ll just build another one.”

Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.



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Athlete of the Week: Trey Yates Tops Rodeos Across Colorado and Wyoming

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Athlete of the Week: Trey Yates Tops Rodeos Across Colorado and Wyoming


Four-time NFR heeler Trey Yates has been at the top of his game, placing at every rodeo he entered between July 9 and July 12. With consistency leading the way, Yates has established a comfortable lead in the Mountain States Circuit Standings.

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NFR Open at the Pikes Peak or Bust Rodeo

Yates punched his ticket to Colorado Springs after winning the average at the 2025 Mountain States Circuit Finals with Garrett Tonozzi. The Pueblo native also claimed the year-end circuit title.

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During Pool A of the NFR Open, Tonozzi and Yates secured their spot in the finals after clocking a 16.3 on two head. In Round 1, the team stopped the clock in 10.6 seconds to win fourth. They followed up their fourth place with a second-place finish in round 2 with a run of 5.7 seconds.

The Mountain States Average Champs will compete again on July 18, looking to secure that huge NFR Open win.

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Circuit Rodeo Success

After changing roping partners in June, Yates has found success with header Riley Kittle at several rodeos, including many in his circuit.

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For the first time in his career, Yates took home first place at the Cattlemen’s Days Inc. Rodeo. He heeled his steer in 4.4 seconds to win $3,384. Yates also entered the calf roping, where he placed sixth and clinched the all-around title.

In Monte Vista, Kittle and Yates placed third with a time of 5.3 seconds, winning $1,757 at the San Luis Valley Ski-Hi Stampede.

The Laramie Jubilee Days wrapped up July 12, and after the dust settled, Yates had added another $2,202 to his busy weekend wins. He and Kittle placed fourth in Laramie with a 5.4-second run.

Despite some tough luck in the first round of the Sheridan WYO Rodeo, Kittle and Yates roped their steer in 5.5 seconds to place second in Round 2, adding $2,832 to the team’s earnings.

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World Standings

Yates has consistently been within the Top 15 for most of the year and is pursuing his fifth trip to Las Vegas. The 2018 NFR Average Champ currently sits at number ten in the PRCA World Standings with $73,598.33.

He also leads the Mountain States Circuit in both the heeling ($29,352.04) and the all-around ($30,654.88) after his success in Gunnison.

After solidifying his spot for his fourth NFR at the 2025 Governor’s Cup, Yates is looking to head back to Sioux Falls for that season-defining rodeo. He sits in the sixteenth spot for the Cinch Playoff Series with a total of 463.04 points.

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Douglas Photographer Captures Historic Black Rancher’s Homestead Under Milky Way

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Douglas Photographer Captures Historic Black Rancher’s Homestead Under Milky Way


Douglas photographer Mark Panasuk enjoys transforming a dark scene into something beautiful.

He’s always on the lookout for another interesting setting, and when he found an abandoned stone ranch house north of Lost Springs, Wyoming, he knew he had something special.

Unlike the famous line from poet Dylan Thomas, he portrayed the property as going “gentle into that good night.”

Digging into its history, Panasuk became even more enamored with capturing the stone walls and grounds with the Milky Way above it because it once was home to one of the most successful Back ranchers in the West — Jim Edwards.

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“It was kind of a unique house in that it was big house, two story, out in the prairie here in eastern Wyoming,” Panasuk said. “It had several buildings … and he was really inventive because he put in that water tower.”

The tower was built with an opening that appeared to allow a space for a fire that would keep the water from freezing in the winter. 

The house had a bathroom with toilet, shower, and the property also featured a stone garage.

There is evidence of several other outbuildings that once were around it. Several accounts of the property state that Edwards was the first in the area to have indoor bathroom facilities.

Panasuk got permission from the current landowner to photograph the house and grounds, and the result shows the Milky Way like an arch above it framing the property.

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He said he put a light inside the house, which has lost its windows, because he thought it made a better piece of art. 

Creating the final image required a combination of 35 photos and three-minute exposures to fully reveal the Milky Way.

He used a computer program to stitch the digital images together to make it one.

Panasuk said he spoke with some of the ranchers around the property and learned that a father or grandfather knew Edwards, who made a name for himself well beyond Wyoming.

Turns out that Edwards is a featured name at the Homestead National Historic Park in Beatrice, Nebraska, and Ebony Magazine once profiled him in its March 1949 issue that had Billy Eckstein on the cover. 

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Wyoming rancher Jim Edwards was profiled in Ebony Magazine for its March 1949 edition. (Ebony Magazine)

Magazine Profile

The profile was titled “The Last Days of Jim Edwards” and characterized him as a “legend” in Wyoming and a name that would remembered well beyond his death.

A history of Edwards written for the Black Past website says he was “one of the most successful African American homesteaders in the state of Wyoming.”

And “Pages From Converse County’s Past” compiled in the 1980s revealed that he was commonly known as “(N-word) Jim.”

But that word did not stop Edwards from becoming a successful rancher and business man. His coming and goings had fairly frequent mentions in the social columns of the local rural newspapers.

The Black Past account of Edwards’ life says that he was born on Feb. 14, 1874, and arrived in Wyoming in 1900 with his father and a group of Italian miners responding to newspaper ads about work in a Lusk coal mine.

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The miners drove Edwards out, and he walked to Lusk and found work on the Wilson Brother’s Running Water Ranch. 

Over the next 14 years, he rose to the rank of foreman and was a good sheepman, cowboy and horse trainer.

In his final years at the ranch, a dispute with the Wilson brothers led to a lawsuit that Edwards won in 1923, giving him $3,000 in back wages plus interest. The Wyoming Supreme Court increased it to $4,000.

The Lusk Free Lance on Nov. 1, 1923, reported that the dispute had been over an accounting of his share of sheep as well as his wages.

Jim Edwards was a familiar figure around Lost Springs, Wyoming, for many years in the early part of the past century.
Jim Edwards was a familiar figure around Lost Springs, Wyoming, for many years in the early part of the past century.

1913 Homestead

Meanwhile in 1913, the Wilsons helped him homestead acreage on Harney Creek. 

Edwards recruited other blacks to homestead on land around him, and he eventually bought their properties.

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“Converse County’s Past” states that Edwards married Lethel Dawson in 1914 in Denver, and that her parents cooked on a river boat on the Mississippi River

When her father contracted tuberculosis, they moved to Denver for his health.

A story looking back on Lost Springs in the Casper Star-Tribune on April 6, 1974, reports that Lethel’s father was a full-blooded Indian and her mother black. 

After her marriage to Edwards, she traveled to Denver from time to time to sing on radio stations.

The Lusk Standard newspaper on Sept. 12, 1919, reported that “Mrs. Jim Edwards” had just become the “happy” owner of a new piano.

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“Now, we’ll have some jazz,” the editor wrote.

In the Ebony Magazine story a few years after his wife’s death, Edwards was still in charge of his 14,000-acre Sixteen-Bar-One Ranch. 

He had named it the Sixteen-Bar-One because it represented the ratio of white ranchers to black ones.

Edwards told the reporter that when he first arrived in Wyoming and then later set up his homestead, gunplay with neighboring ranchers and would-be outlaws was not uncommon. He was tested.

“No man will ever run Jim Edwards off of his land,” Edwards told the magazine. “Let ’em know right away that you’re going to fight for what you own. Just because a man’s colored is no reason for people to think he’s a coward.”

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That philosophy likely was part of the reason for a story in the Niobrara County News on Dec. 3, 1914, when Edwards still served as herder for the Wilson Brothers and had a “mix-up” with a herder from another ranch over their bands of sheep.

Edwards had the man arrested, but later “dismissed the case and paid all the costs.”

Jim Edwards became co-owner of a Casper restaurant that featured Southern fried chicken.
Jim Edwards became co-owner of a Casper restaurant that featured Southern fried chicken. (Newspapers.com)

Sheep ‘Straying’

Another mention of Edwards in the Lusk Herald a year earlier had him complaining that he had a lot of trouble with sheep “straying away.”

The Ebony account said that at one time, Edwards had 20,000 acres of land with oil rights, and during his normal operations had more than 1,000 head of cattle, 9,000 sheep, 200 horses, 5,000 chickens and 500 hogs.

He told the reporter that what he considered most important in his success was a “clean mind and a few years ago a pistol.”

“I didn’t have to use my pistol much, but then you don’t have to when you make your decision to stand at the outset,” he added.

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Edwards built the stone house himself, helped pay for the construction of the Congregational Church in Lusk — where his wife sang in the choir — and told the reporter that Lethel had been “the guiding influence in my life.”

And it turned out that ranching was not his only interest and business success. 

A feature story in the Casper Tribune-Herald on July 16, 1945, profiled a restaurant co-owned by Mary Simms, a black woman, and Edwards that specialized in Southern fried chicken.

“In spite of rationing which has made it difficult to obtain the steaks to fill demand, the restaurant has kept abreast of the demands for the excellent fried chicken which has been its specialty,” the newspaper reported. “With the generous helping of chicken, French fries, a vegetable, dessert and the special golden brown succulent biscuits are served.”

Edwards’ love Lethel died of leukemia in 1945, according to the Converse County history, and he sold his ranch that contained 18 sections to four buyers in 1950.

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The Scottsbluff Star-Herald on Jan. 7, 1951, recounted Edwards’ death at age 76.

“A Scottsbluff man died from suffocation Saturday night after water boiled away in a pot in which chicken was being cooked filling a basement room with smoke,” the newspaper reported. “The dead man was James E. Edwards, age unknown, who rented a room at 801 East Eighth Street.”

He is buried in Scottsbluff.

Panasuk said he was happy to get a photo of the once prosperous ranch while it still stands.

“The sad part about it is that probably about in 10 years it’s all going to be gone,” he said.

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Dale Killingbeck can be reached at dale@cowboystatedaily.com.



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